Voice from the frontline: Organising in a pandemic

Features, Apr 10th

A care worker breaks down what can, and indeed must, be done to self organise if proper protection and treatment is to be won in the face of inaction by authorities.

Care workers right now are facing a huge challenge. We were overworked, at risk and underpaid before Covid-19 came along. A lot of us are facing massive upheaval in our work and personal lives. Lockdown is stopping us from seeing our friends, family and colleagues, and the demands now placed on the NHS, care homes and other workplaces have increased and changed rapidly. So now more than ever we are asking, what can we do?

What are we facing?

Some of the issues we are facing are new, and some are old problems exacerbated by the current crisis. The first one we are going to look at is the most common and well known right now.

PPE

If you didn’t know how important PPE was a few months ago, you probably know now. PPE (that’s Personal Protective Equipment in case you missed it) is desperately needed. Because Coronavirus is a respiratory virus, you are at risk of contracting it if you are in close contact with anybody (hence social distancing measures). That risk is increased massively when working with patients who are displaying symptoms, and even more so if your work involves procedures that are aerosol generating (opening airways, ventilating etc.). The PPE you need, as advised by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and Public Health England (PHE) is detailed online, depending on where you work and what kind of work you do. The highest level of PPE, and therefore the safest, is:

Gloves

Gowns (arm or leg covering)

FFP3 mask

Face visor

Every single item of this should be single use and not re-used. I know personally that workers such as myself, at the highest level of risk, are not being provided with the correct equipment, or being asked to re-use it to save on PPE. This is hugely dangerous and puts everyone at risk, yourself, your family and any other patients you come into contact with.

What can we do?

First step is to find out what PPE you need to do your work safely. Do not ask your managers what this is, and do not trust what they tell you. Go online and find out what the guidance is, or ask colleagues what they have heard. Chances are there will be varying opinions and stories, advice has changed almost every day since lockdown, so it’s important you find out what your colleagues and you need to protect yourselves.

If there is an issue (there will be) then raise it with everyone. Start with your colleagues, discuss the importance of pressuring management to provide you with a supply of correct PPE and make sure it continues. Emphasise that unless you are protected as workers, you cannot possibly care for and protect your patients properly. Also emphasise the huge risk to yourselves and your loved ones; doctors, nurses and healthcare assistants have all died of Coronavirus during this pandemic and this would not have happened if they were properly protected from day one.

What can you expect?

Management will most likely try and push your concerns aside, they will cite shortages and ‘advice’ from other management about what you need and it will not be what you want. Unfortunately, you can also expect some pushback or apathy from your colleagues. Care work has an unpleasant tendency for some workers to adapt a ‘get on with it’ approach. So used to cutbacks, poor pay and overwork, this is not surprising, but it needs to be challenged and overcome as much as possible.

How can we get what we want?

This will depend hugely on what work you do, your colleagues, patients, management etc. The first thing to think about is how to apply pressure, what do management want more than anything, and you can use that as leverage. Right now, the continuation of the service is top priority; if you and your colleagues feel at risk with the PPE being provided, or not provided with any, then try and stop that service. This may be a big challenge, and will take a lot of discussion. Emotional blackmail is one of the things we often encounter when organising as care workers; ‘who will look after the patients’, ‘people will suffer’ or even ‘people will die’. But remember, this is a very unique situation, nobody has faced a working environment like this in living memory, so it is vitally important that we start trying to counter attitudes and beliefs which put the patient over the safety of workers. If we get sick, if we die, there then will be nobody to provide the care that is needed. We are a specialised workforce, and regardless of how badly paid and treated we are, we are not easily replaced. Our experience and training means we must stay safe if the management want that work to continue, because we all know they aren’t able or willing to do it…

Publicity is another potential pressure point. Most organisations, especially the NHS, are trying very hard right now to appear as though things are ‘under control’, even when we know as workers that it is far from the truth. If you feel that putting out information about the dangerous working conditions will help your cause, then find a way to do it. Just be aware that it will most likely be best to be as anonymous as possible.

The law? If the law wasn’t a huge amount of use to us before, then it certainly isn’t now. However, it is still useful to have some backing when convincing colleagues and threatening management. There are laws which surround safety in the workplace, adequate PPE and so on. It’s not worth your while learning all of these back to front, however there are certain passages of law it can be useful to quote and share around, section 100 of the 1996 Employee rights act is a good start. It essentially covers workers who stop working because of facing dangerous situations in the workplace.

Stick together and fight

We have to start fighting for more and better PPE now, and we have to look after each other. This is a hugely stressful and frightening time for care workers, so now more than ever we need to stick together, look after each other, and have each other’s backs. We can’t let this issue slide like we have in the past, this is not simply a pay cut, another understaffed shift, or extra job for you to do. This is our wellbeing, our lives and our health. If we don’t fight back now, we may never get another chance.

This article was first published by the Brighton local of anarcho-syndicalist union the Solidarity Federation.

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